Choosing a provider, public or private?Things to consider when comparing dedicated server hosting providers.
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by Casey Cook January 26, 2009
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| Casey Cook |
I am a freelance copywriter who has worked in the ISP/web hosting space since 1997 in positions ranging from technical support to director of network operations to product management. |
| Casey Cook
has written 1 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Casey Cook... |
When shopping around for managed dedicated hosting, there
are lots of things to consider- platform, plan features, and pricing, just to
name a few. There are also less obvious considerations
that can have a major impact on how successful your choice will be, and one of
the biggest is also one of the easiest to answer- is the company privately held
or publically traded?
We’re not necessarily talking about investment
opportunities (although a successful dedicated server host might look good in
your portfolio). As a factor in your
decision making process, knowing that a company is public means that a lot of
your due diligence has already been done, and done well. Before a company can be publicly traded, it
must be audited from top to bottom. Not
only must the company be financially sound, but everything from personnel to
equipment to the overall business plan must undergo a complete evaluation. All business practices must be fully
documented, which might not seem like a big thing, but anyone who has worked in
an environment where people make things up as they go along can attest to the
benefit of quality documentation.
There’s also the matter of accountability. Where a privately held company may be
accountable to the customers and the business owner, a publically held
dedicated server hosting company has another level of accountability to deal
with- shareholders and a board of directors. As a customer, your visibility into what goes on at your managed
dedicated hosting provider ends at the website and customer support
number. Shareholders and the board of
directors on the other hand have much greater visibility into the operation of
the company, and questionable decisions, performance issues, and anything else
that impacts the bottom line is subject to scrutiny by the stockholders.
Need more? Consider this- a public managed dedicated hosting company is likely to
be much larger than privately held competitors, which means as a customer, you
enjoy the benefit of enterprise class infrastructure, in terms of hardware and
software, as well as better network peering. A public company is required to make regular financial disclosures, and
must comply with a host of government regulations designed to protect
shareholders (and which also work in favor of customers). The company history is a matter of verifiable
public record- fly by night doesn’t cut it in this arena. While there aren’t many publicly traded
companies currently competing in the managed dedicated hosting space (a quick
search pulled up NaviSite), that’s likely to change as businesses adjust to the
changing technology landscape.
In the end, it comes down to trust. No matter how much research you are able to
do on your own, it generally can’t match the ongoing evaluation that a
publically held managed dedicated host must pass. Why not put those watchdogs to work for
you? Not only can it save you a lot of
headaches and second guessing, but who knows? You just might end up with a good performer in your stock portfolio!
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